94 ,.yyy. ^"^ ............. . II since 1747 West Germany's oldest '" and most respected y.Ä maker of fine . .. ' ,\ china . ", \ /' .;-::.< (:-$<. ., !;:,"" ,( ^ . 1' \ ^ ! 'l<( ;pf A '. .........- 'S . .. ç.. ,. . J, h >> r v .,) :: :. _S,-:'.k ^' ,^"""i-" :: .. <. -: ".N'-. ,.'.,^ . . :.} :.,.. ', ......, . . " :; "'i' ': ' .,..... .' -$ > :,. b:- -I!' ' .' <5'" * EMPEROR-5 pc. place settmg, about $58. Send for FREE color Fuerstenberg brochure to: EBELING & REUSS CO. Dept F 23rd & Chestnut Sts., Phlla., Pa.19103 MEANS MORE AT Glamorous Montego Bay's only complete resort. Our own 18-hole Robert Trent Jones golf course. One of the world's most beautiful beaches. 4 tennis courts, sailing. luxury accommodations, all beachfront, include 17 cottages with 15 private swimming pools. See your travel agent. Represented by Hetland & Stevens Inc , 211 E. 43rd St., New York, TN 7-1450; Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Miami, Toronto. George R. Smith Co.: Beverly Hills, Seattle, San Francisco, Sydney. fJfalj HOTEL & COTTAGE COLONY MONTEGO BAY Heinz E. W. Simonitsch Managing Director J (I iI/ j BEVERLY HILLS Silverplated Wine Taster in antique finish, complete with neck chain. A gift for those who take their wine seriously. 3 inches in diameter. 10.00 delivered. Please add 5% sales tax in California. 351 N. Beverly ,Drtv . : eve ;. I 2 I ...',... .:;4&'''' > . .' oW -w-Ao:&.--.... :. >>'-0 .:-.. ....v ' · þ t .... ,o>i ,.,. ...... ,i> ! ^ ' " ':f :JJ .t?:.::. '''" " . ::....$- \0,. \ " ... ë: ... << .. . 1".(..,,>>:-:-:. . ..:.... ý. an ts evaluated three or four papers at a tÏ1ne and forlnulated specific questions to the authors, who were given fifteen lninutes or so to reply. Then, after a coffee break, at which the participants mingled with the observers, the floor was opened for general discussion. Be- cause the conference was in Enghsh and lnost of the repol ters assigned to cover it were Japanese, the sponsoring cOlnlnittee was able to exercise a rather stringen t sort of news lnanagemen t. Although kogai is one of the lnost con- troversial and thoroughly covered topics in the Tokyo press, the daily selninars were closed to Japanese reporters, and they received virtually all their infor- lnation on the discussions at a lengthy press conference held by Dr. T suru after each day's seSSIon. The Japanese interest in E.D. is understandable. The nation's relnark- able postwar industrial resurgence has given it the world's third-largest gross national product ( after the United States and Russia) hut has, simultane- ouslv, exposed the population to pollu- tIon hazards unlnatched anywhere in the world-hazards that have by no lneans gone unrecognized eIther in the industrial cOlnlnunity or alnong Japan's political parties. Industrial e f fl u e n ts have already rendered several slnall areas of Japan all but uninhabitable- an alarlning situation, since only seven- teen per cent of the nation's land is arahle-but more typical examples of pollution and congestion are to be found in lnetropolitan Tokyo, which was alnlost entirely destroyed during the Second World War and then re- built in the next twelve years with Ettle planning or coördination. On the sec- ond day of the conference, the foreign visitors were taken to see SOlne of these exalnples and some of the city's control facilities. Their tour took theln first to the observation platforln of the Tokyo Tower, which is eight hundred and twenty feet high, and froln which, thè visitors were assured, they could see 1\.Jount Fuji, sixty lniles away, if onlv the air were clear. The sun was shin- ing hrightly on the lnorning the dele- gates ascended to the tower ohserva- tion rOOln, but because of lnog they were undble to pick out even the Iln- perial Palace, about two miles across town. "This is terrible," said Dr. Ed- ward L. Stockton, a consultant to the National Sanitation Foundation, ef Ann Arbor, Michigan. "I wish they'd brough t us here on a clear day. The view lnust be trelnendous." Courteous- ly, a bystander relninded Dr. Stockton that he had been brought to the tower to see not the view but the slnog that QUEEN ANNE from our large collection of English and French dzning chairs A meticulously crafted replica of one of the finest Queen Anne chairs we have seen. Reproduced from the museum original, in the mellow luxury of old mahogany; and covered in lush Scalamandrè silks. Gra- cious, comfortable chairs that are at home around a dining table, card table or as occasional chairs. Arm Chair 24" wide, 42" high; Side Chair 19%." wide, 41" high. side Q l65 arm 195 chair ea. chair fi!!J ea. F.O.B. New York City. Add $8 per chair crating charge beyond normal delivery area. There's no other shop like Lloyds in New York. For here, is one of the few places that you take your own sweet time to browse through a wonderful collection of fine antique and reproduction furniture, decorative accessories, and estate pieces. Here, your own sense of good taste and value can lead you to the pieces that you'd like to live with. NEW 64 PAGE CATALOGUE S 1 00 LOYx]þS 116 E. 60 ST.. N.Y., N.Y. 10022 · PL 97313 Steaks renowned 'round the world . . . the choice of discerning gourmets Bruno's Pen and Pencil JOhn c.: no U Restaurant 205 East 45th Street · MU 2-8660 -, \, ' ...N NEW YORK'S BELOVED Algonquin Superb pre-theQtre dining... and just a stroH to your theatre. After-theatre drinks and Supper Buffet with Hthe talk of the town" C7!ð o u ,,-uin- 59 WEST 44th ST. NEW YORK · MU 7 4400 Indø()( "parking (1l0 ch'or9 ) fOF dinner 9 $.t$ <;tAd w ekend visitors.